National Thursday 10 November 2011, 3:54PM
Media release from National
A re-elected National Government will deliver even more
operations, and shorten surgical waiting times to a maximum of four
months over the next three years says National Health spokesman,
Tony Ryall.
"Our plan means more patients will get elective surgery,
faster.
"In our first term, we achieved unprecedented levels of elective
surgical operations, increased staffing, and reduced waiting times.
Elective surgery has increased by 22 per cent since National came
to office; an extra 500 operations a week.
"Currently DHBs provide just over 90% of surgery within the
long-standing goal of treatment within six months of a patient
being booked onto a waiting list.
"Now we are in a position to build on these significant
achievements with even faster access to elective surgery, cancer
treatment, and important diagnostics tests."
Elective surgery
"National will work to further reduce waiting times for elective
surgery like hip and knee replacements, cataracts, and tonsils and
gall-bladder removal.
"National will ensure that all patients ready and booked for
surgery will get their operations within:
Six months by mid-2012
Five months by mid-2013
Four months by December 2014
"This target will be supported by additional volumes of at least
4000 operations a year plus surgical efficiencies. More patients
will be seen each year, faster."
"An additional $12 million per annum from the annual budget
increase for Health will be allocated for these extra operations.
DHBs will also contribute through existing budgets and
efficiencies.
"Under National, additional elective operations have rocketed to
an extra 27,000 patients per year. Our DHB teams have done a
magnificent job."
Cancer Treatment
"We have successfully implemented the world gold standard of four
weeks waiting for radiation treatment here in New Zealand. No
cancer radiation patients have been sent to Australia since late in
2008.
"If re-elected we will work with cancer specialists and networks
to expand the four week target to include chemotherapy treatment.
This can be achieved within existing DHB budgets.
Diagnostics
"National will work with clinicians to further reduce waiting
times for important diagnostic tests, such as CT scans, MRI scans,
angiograms and colonoscopies.
"Under National, more District Health Boards are letting GPs refer
their patients directly for diagnostic tests like MRIs and CT scans
without the patient waiting to see a hospital specialist. Under
National, more DHBs will let GPs do this, where clinically
appropriate.
"National will provide up to $4 million to develop monitoring,
reporting and efficiency programmes to support the new waiting
times' goal."
Workforce policy
"Our workforce policy will also support these initiatives, and we
are releasing that today as well," says Mr Ryall.
Highlights from the workforce policy include:
a national stroke network
dedicated stroke units in every metropolitan and provincial
hospital
expanding the voluntary bonding scheme to include medical
radiation therapists and medical physicists who deliver crucial
cancer treatment
providing another 80 medical training places, and
expanding clinical networks to give doctors, nurses and other
health professionals greater leadership roles.
Visit the Shorter Waiting Times policy at:
www.national.org.nz/files/2011/Shorter_Waiting_Times_policy.pdf
Visit the Health Workforce policy at:
www.national.org.nz/files/2011/Health_Workforce_policy.pdf